Probably the best Ryan’s ruclips.net/user/postUgkxGZedDTcDfgD7fG_uU4esfx_EgxzlY2_1 Plans on building a shed is hardly ever found. And Ryan takes the mystery out of different types of foundation options, etc. He even shows how to build a shed with different designs. Very comprehensive, covering different roofing materials, siding, etc.
As a contractor of 34 years, I have figured out ways around the rare occasion when such a thing would be necessary; and yet, I really, really want one. What a beast and a beauty! Engineered simplicity is magnificent.
New sub here. As a home builder myself I really appreciate your work. You do outstanding quality at a superb pace with the size of your crew. I gotta admit, I've been binge watching your builds the past two days. As a home builder/business owner myself I appreciate the quality you put in. Don't let anyone tell you different. Quality work is what separates a long prosperous businessman to your average contractor. Hope you see this comment buddy. Keep doing the work you do.
*Used this nail gun for framing my basement and it worked great **MyBest.Tools** Two downsides are weight and its not a 30 degree. For the cost it was perfect for completing my project. Worth every dime.*
At today’s labor rates $1000 not a lot of money if it increases speed and reduces time. Times money on a job site. Great content 👍 I’m sure it reduces fatigue also, bet that’s noticeable at night when you get home.
I used one like this this summer at a manufacturing shop building a 28’ tall 140’ long salt shack for storing then road salts for the highways. Two rows, 8” on center holding three plys of 2x10 together, with the protruding tips bent over to lock them in. That gun is a beast to use
I'd wouldn't be surprised if the house is drafting up legislation right now to limit the size of the nail magazine and remove the bump trigger on this bad boy. Great review!!
I was building modular buildings in a factory setting where we were picking up the roof sections with overhead hoist and using 5 inch nail guns to set the roof shooting upwards from under the top plate on the wall, had a 5” nail blow threw & shoot right threw the bill of my hat in front of my face, after that I treated that tool with much more respect 💩
one thing i would like to see you talk about is the BOSTITCH BRT130 5-1/8-Inch Heavy-Duty Timber Framing Nailer for those of us who don't want to spend the $1000 on the jumbo nailer. i know this isn't as large of a nailer however it seems like it will complete most jobs building pole barns especially for those of use who don't build pole barns everyday.
Love the over view, thank you. It's definitely a beast of a nailer. You ever worry about it splitting material out when it drives or do you pre-drill first like you do with the perlins?
It is my understanding that most coated nails have a glue that melts from heat of friction going in and then cools and hardens right away to make the nail to wood interface stronger. I may be wrong, but that was what I was told years ago.
It's true, and it does help quite a bit. A lot of nail gun nails I've seen have some sort of coating. Either holding them together and working as a glue or they're dipped.
Interesting issue with the big nailer. I suppose the way to find out what the issue is would be to play with a few variables. try larger tube/try shorter hose etc. Trying to decide in my head if the quick succession nails all going in at the same depth is a supply or pressure issue
Me little idea why the 6" ringshanks didn't go flush, ya had 'em on your ponies where your beam material could flex away when the gun hit it. It's kinda like that first tack nail running sheathing when the sheet isn't flat against the wood. I call it "bouncy plywood". Get the corners tacked and it is a completely different situation. Put the beam on the ground and put your foot on the board. When you are wall framing, you usually have the posts on the ground
Comparing ring shank to smooth nails isn't much of a comparison...... 3 1/2" framers also have capability to shoot rings shanks. Impressive nailer non the less, if for anything the size of the nail it is able to shoot. When we go over 3 1/2" we start screwing, lagging, or through bolting. Nice work on your steel buildings. I've truly enjoyed watching some of them!
Hi Kyle... My only concern would be that it wouldn't work in hard hardwood. Have you tried? Here in Peru we don't build main structures of a wooden house with soft woods like douglas fir or the likes. We use hardwoods like hard mahogany, kingwood, iron wood, etc. I guess that's why I've never seen here a carpenter (framer) using a pneumatic framing nailer. But, even though a good framing nailer might not be able to sink a 3.5" or even a 2" nail... it must probably drive it quite usefully enough so that it's easier to complete the nailing by hammering. I'd really like to have a framing nailer, I'd like to test this idea! I'm saving to buy the Hitachi's cordless nailer! Wish me luck!!
Is there no adjustability on the gun at all, and only by adjusting the air supply. It seams you would want to be able to adjust the driven depth of any size nail right at the gun.
From information online and looking at pictures, their seems to be no adjustment on the gun its self. Though running a gun that big you would defiantly need a larger gas powered air compressor. Which if you were running multiple tools at different pressures you could easily add in line regulators for the lower pressure tools.
I know this is probably a stupid question but did you oil the gun before the test any time my regular gun is jambing I oil and runs nails for the rest of the day. Just a thought. Thanks for the awesome videos
Try adding a guage on the hose end right before the gun. Theres probably some lost psi over the length of the hose, so you could crank up the air on the compressor outlet. I've seen up to a 20 psi drop over a 50 ft hose, maybe that's just my experience but could be worth looking into.
Perhaps but, take a look at a 3/4" and 1" drive impact guns vs a 3/8" & 1/2" drives. The latter require only a 1/4" air line while the others require a 1/2" or larger air line. It's volume of air not necessarily air pressure. Air temps have a lot to do with it as well, same with humidity levels. I'm not saying you're wrong because, longer the run the more you lose, same with electrical extension cords, which is why you should run heavier to compensate. That's been my experience, check volume over pressure first. Cheers :)
I went back and looked at it again. His first shot, before he fired, I thought "oh no, you are going thru a knot" and sure enough, no go. But all of them were the same no-go, that says something. In slo-mo, you can see the material bounce. I have felt this before. It is physics, inertia and mass. BTW, I appreciated how he showed the failure and how he dealt with it. No deception. Points to Kyle.
@@marvincarvin1846 exactly. The Transparency is muchly appreciated and the negatives or mishaps are certainly something not seen barely ever on tool reviews
Got to shoot that big sucker at yhe nfba expo. Its awesome! Wondering how well it works through gusset plates on the trusses? We bang 20s through the heels on to a notched gluelam post. And lvl headers any issues going through those with 20s?
You could go "cordless" with a HPA tank and a high flow pressure regulator. With two 6 liter (standard firefighter setup) 4500psi tanks on your back you could run that fasco for 30 minutes if the flowrate requirement holds true to spec.
I just looked this up, theres company's that make setups that use a tank similar to paintball setups. Kind of in between a compressor and co2/paslode. Seems really nice for some applications. I never knew this was an option.
Pressure will a lower at the nailer hence issue experienced. There’s a few factors for this. As already mentioned, a gauge on the nailer will show this. Also, by fitting a gauge you will begin to understand pressure losses etc. through hose and the likes. As always, a BIG 👍 from me!
Yeah Don’t Let It Get Wet Specially The Last Time The Gun Started Shooting Nails From Condensation Inside During The Cold 🥶 Weather In Overall Is Nice Gun Nailer.,. Did You Ever Find Out Why Or Reason...
With the 6 1/4” nails: your boards were flexing when nail was shot. This “wastes” the energy of the nailer, leaving the nail proud. Thats my guess at least.
When I saw you connecting to your compressor i thought initially the tank was too small. The reason the nailer head is so large is that it needs a large capacity reservoir of air for each nail and a fast recovery, compared to your Hitachi. I had this problem in my workshop and cured it with a reserve air tank.
Yeah, unfortunately we downunder, do not have a an understanding of your sizes. We call it, 100 X 3.75 bullet head nail or flat head nail. Or gun nails are 50 X 2.89.
Isn't the shear strength depends on 2 factors: material and diameter? If the material is the same and diameter is the same? Basically the part when the shear forces occur is flat (shank) and the threaded part only inside the bottom part. Also, because of the additional clamping, the frictional force should be higher and overall strength also.
@@donalexey i mean i guess there is truth to that. I really dont know all tbe science behind it but generally nails have a stronger shear strength than screws. But screws have come a long way and there are bow screws that csn be stronger than nails. I like screws for clamping power but i will always go to a nail for shear power. But just my opinion.
While they do make structurally rated screws now. The cost difference between a nail and screw rated with the same shear strength huge. The nail might be 10 cents, while the screw would be a couple dollars each. Now times that by a couple thousand fasteners for a typical pole barn. Or 10,000 for a average house. Edit to add that speed is also a factor, a those 4 inch nails take 1 second, a comparable rated screw would take 10-15 seconds depending on tool and lumber.
screws are hardened since they have to have threads and a socket head that doesn't get stripped. That makes them much more brittle and much weaker, and makes the building more like to fail catastrophically instead of flexing under load. There are structural screws that aren't brittle but they cost way more (probably 5 times?) and take much longer to drive, especially compared to an air nailer.
Great video... what’s the part number for the 4in and 6.5in nails with the blue coating?... I don’t seem to see them on the fasco site... or where do you source the nails? Cheers!
crank the pressure upto 135, run most of my airtools there cause thats what all my compressors came set to, im sure they dont get near that by the time the air travels through 50' of hose and a few fittings
I have followed your videos for some time now and enjoy the building aspect of them but as I continue to watch them I find your are progressively endorsing products all the time which is all you seem to talk about nowadays, little disappointing
daniel hayes dude if you’ve followed me for any amount of time then you know it’s not about endorsement persay... it’s about educating what I feel is the best. The questions and DMs.... emails I get a week are staggering. I find this allows me a place t show people. Clearly I’m not being sponsored by one company. I try to use and show the best tool for every niche of the jobsite. Obviously I appreciate you following and I hope you can continue to enjoy the content. Thanks
daniel hayes WTF is wrong with Kyle endorsing, promoting or just showing if it's about something he knows it's actually useful and valuable? You fool, to back to your cave.
Probably the best Ryan’s ruclips.net/user/postUgkxGZedDTcDfgD7fG_uU4esfx_EgxzlY2_1 Plans on building a shed is hardly ever found. And Ryan takes the mystery out of different types of foundation options, etc. He even shows how to build a shed with different designs. Very comprehensive, covering different roofing materials, siding, etc.
As a contractor of 34 years, I have figured out ways around the rare occasion when such a thing would be necessary; and yet, I really, really want one. What a beast and a beauty! Engineered simplicity is magnificent.
New sub here. As a home builder myself I really appreciate your work. You do outstanding quality at a superb pace with the size of your crew. I gotta admit, I've been binge watching your builds the past two days. As a home builder/business owner myself I appreciate the quality you put in. Don't let anyone tell you different. Quality work is what separates a long prosperous businessman to your average contractor. Hope you see this comment buddy. Keep doing the work you do.
David Adkins thank you David I appreciate the kind words
*Used this nail gun for framing my basement and it worked great **MyBest.Tools** Two downsides are weight and its not a 30 degree. For the cost it was perfect for completing my project. Worth every dime.*
I like toolsday kyle but i can't wait for the next chapter one week. More toolsdays man. Amazing stuff you have
what a beast man! Great nailgun
A trailer tour would be sweet.
At today’s labor rates $1000 not a lot of money if it increases speed and reduces time. Times money on a job site. Great content 👍 I’m sure it reduces fatigue also, bet that’s noticeable at night when you get home.
I used one like this this summer at a manufacturing shop building a 28’ tall 140’ long salt shack for storing then road salts for the highways. Two rows, 8” on center holding three plys of 2x10 together, with the protruding tips bent over to lock them in. That gun is a beast to use
That is a monster of a gun. Once again great video bro.
You've got to do a video on 10d 20d 30d nails as it's a dying term of language Kyle keep up the great work 👍
Happy happy happy it’s toolsday
glad you explained the metric size on those nails :D
Reminds me of a 3 inch pneumatic impact gun we used back in the powerplants. IT WAS HUGE!!
If anything it looks bad ass and fun to use.
Great video man! Learning a lot here l. Very thankful for this, liked & sub’d!
I'd wouldn't be surprised if the house is drafting up legislation right now to limit the size of the nail magazine and remove the bump trigger on this bad boy. Great review!!
I was building modular buildings in a factory setting where we were picking up the roof sections with overhead hoist and using 5 inch nail guns to set the roof shooting upwards from under the top plate on the wall, had a 5” nail blow threw & shoot right threw the bill of my hat in front of my face, after that I treated that tool with much more respect 💩
Kyle where did you buy/find the 6.25" nails for the gun. Cant find those specific 1s anywhere on line. Not even an image of them
What a Monster!
one thing i would like to see you talk about is the BOSTITCH BRT130 5-1/8-Inch Heavy-Duty Timber Framing Nailer for those of us who don't want to spend the $1000 on the jumbo nailer. i know this isn't as large of a nailer however it seems like it will complete most jobs building pole barns especially for those of use who don't build pole barns everyday.
ANOTHER MONSTER LIKE AIRBOW!
Love the over view, thank you. It's definitely a beast of a nailer. You ever worry about it splitting material out when it drives or do you pre-drill first like you do with the perlins?
Ham68 never had an issue
Nice nailer. How much do the nails cost and the local availability? Do you have order the nails or in stock local?
Kyle, have you tried using the larger diameter air fittings and hose?
It is my understanding that most coated nails have a glue that melts from heat of friction going in and then cools and hardens right away to make the nail to wood interface stronger. I may be wrong, but that was what I was told years ago.
Only coated sinkers
It's true, and it does help quite a bit. A lot of nail gun nails I've seen have some sort of coating. Either holding them together and working as a glue or they're dipped.
thats awesome
We need a tool Tuesday on hammers :)
Great information on the jumbo nailer.
How about a product review on the B&B 20k Trailer.
VideosByAl great idea... in time
Yes, a cordless Fasco F91AC RHN20-160 powered by a Dewalt flexvolt battery would be a good thing.
Hi Kyle , Can " SIPS" panels be used in you type of buildings?
Cordless jumbo nailer would be awesome, but should probably come with its own crane to lift it.
Aaron Geiger really not as heavy as you think
@@RRBuildings love your stuff bud. Keep it up.
Interesting issue with the big nailer. I suppose the way to find out what the issue is would be to play with a few variables. try larger tube/try shorter hose etc. Trying to decide in my head if the quick succession nails all going in at the same depth is a supply or pressure issue
David Riley I think supply as well as bounce in my post I was nailing into
Me little idea why the 6" ringshanks didn't go flush, ya had 'em on your ponies where your beam material could flex away when the gun hit it. It's kinda like that first tack nail running sheathing when the sheet isn't flat against the wood. I call it "bouncy plywood". Get the corners tacked and it is a completely different situation. Put the beam on the ground and put your foot on the board. When you are wall framing, you usually have the posts on the ground
Bouncy plywood pisses me off lol I usually have the framing gun hooked up just to avoid that
Comparing ring shank to smooth nails isn't much of a comparison...... 3 1/2" framers also have capability to shoot rings shanks. Impressive nailer non the less, if for anything the size of the nail it is able to shoot. When we go over 3 1/2" we start screwing, lagging, or through bolting. Nice work on your steel buildings. I've truly enjoyed watching some of them!
We use a California Air compressor. It's practically silent.
Hi Kyle... My only concern would be that it wouldn't work in hard hardwood. Have you tried? Here in Peru we don't build main structures of a wooden house with soft woods like douglas fir or the likes. We use hardwoods like hard mahogany, kingwood, iron wood, etc. I guess that's why I've never seen here a carpenter (framer) using a pneumatic framing nailer. But, even though a good framing nailer might not be able to sink a 3.5" or even a 2" nail... it must probably drive it quite usefully enough so that it's easier to complete the nailing by hammering. I'd really like to have a framing nailer, I'd like to test this idea! I'm saving to buy the Hitachi's cordless nailer! Wish me luck!!
What are you using for hearing protection? Those ear buds? Any good?
Tim White isotunes extra and yes I wouldn’t use if I didn’t love them
Is there no adjustability on the gun at all, and only by adjusting the air supply. It seams you would want to be able to adjust the driven depth of any size nail right at the gun.
From information online and looking at pictures, their seems to be no adjustment on the gun its self.
Though running a gun that big you would defiantly need a larger gas powered air compressor. Which if you were running multiple tools at different pressures you could easily add in line regulators for the lower pressure tools.
I know this is probably a stupid question but did you oil the gun before the test any time my regular gun is jambing I oil and runs nails for the rest of the day. Just a thought. Thanks for the awesome videos
Shane McCauley yes always oil
What type of compressor are you using?
That coating is likely heat activated, friction makes it stick.
For ring shank... coating helps it "sink" into the wood, the ring shanks is what makes it "stick" per say.
Not 1/4 it needs 3/8 to get the air it needs. Great gun.
Id like to know what saftey glasses those are!
What brand of nails are those? I’m looking for 6 1/4” and 4” for my same nailer. Just picked one up. All I can find is 6 1/4” ring shank bright
Kyle, great content. Very informative as always. I need that hat where can I get my hands on one.?
Cullen Selinger this is my hat sold over on beachandbarn.com look under collaborations
RR Buildings thanks man. Keep up the awesome videos and great work.
Try adding a guage on the hose end right before the gun. Theres probably some lost psi over the length of the hose, so you could crank up the air on the compressor outlet. I've seen up to a 20 psi drop over a 50 ft hose, maybe that's just my experience but could be worth looking into.
My guess is that the failure was due to a bouncy saw horse and not enuff mass to resist the impact. Just a guess.
Perhaps but, take a look at a 3/4" and 1" drive impact guns vs a 3/8" & 1/2" drives. The latter require only a 1/4" air line while the others require a 1/2" or larger air line. It's volume of air not necessarily air pressure. Air temps have a lot to do with it as well, same with humidity levels. I'm not saying you're wrong because, longer the run the more you lose, same with electrical extension cords, which is why you should run heavier to compensate. That's been my experience, check volume over pressure first. Cheers :)
I went back and looked at it again. His first shot, before he fired, I thought "oh no, you are going thru a knot" and sure enough, no go. But all of them were the same no-go, that says something. In slo-mo, you can see the material bounce. I have felt this before. It is physics, inertia and mass.
BTW, I appreciated how he showed the failure and how he dealt with it. No deception. Points to Kyle.
@@marvincarvin1846 exactly. The Transparency is muchly appreciated and the negatives or mishaps are certainly something not seen barely ever on tool reviews
I cant find these particular nails. help!
That's just the difference between a ring shank and a smooth shank
Got to shoot that big sucker at yhe nfba expo. Its awesome! Wondering how well it works through gusset plates on the trusses? We bang 20s through the heels on to a notched gluelam post. And lvl headers any issues going through those with 20s?
Can you please tell me where you get those nails, or what brand they are and stuff?
which brand of hose do you use?
JUMBO!
What type of headphones/hearing protection are you wearing?
Ryan Carnahan Isotunes Extra.
You could go "cordless" with a HPA tank and a high flow pressure regulator. With two 6 liter (standard firefighter setup) 4500psi tanks on your back you could run that fasco for 30 minutes if the flowrate requirement holds true to spec.
I just looked this up, theres company's that make setups that use a tank similar to paintball setups. Kind of in between a compressor and co2/paslode. Seems really nice for some applications. I never knew this was an option.
What's really impressive,the price of those nails
I think I'll stick to deferring to the engineer's judgement on what fasteners to use, but yeah, that's a pretty sick nailer
You should do target practice and see how it goes! 😂
Idea for a video,
Types of nails because every time you use terms it gets confusing
Juan Castro Agree 100% - I have no idea what a 20 penny nail is or most other size he talks about.
Size Inches Cm
2d 1.00 2.540
3d 1.25 3.175
4d 1.50 3.810
5d 1.75 4.445
6d 2.00 5.080
7d 2.25 5.715
8d 2.50 6.350
9d 2.75 6.985
10d 3.00 7.620
12d 3.25 8.255
Size Inches Cm
16d 3.50 8.890
20d 4.00 10.160
30d 4.50 11.430
40d 5.00 12.700
50d 5.50 13.970
60d 6.00 15.240
70d 7.00 17.780
80d 8.00 20.320
90d 9.00 22.860
100d 10.00 25.400
This might help
www.engineersedge.com/nail_size_chart.htm
@@Ham68229 that did help a lot, thanks but I would still like Kyle to dumb it down a bit for me lol
comparing an uncoated 3.25" nail to a 4.25" coated ring shank nail... what did you think was going to happen?
6.25, and yes, that was the point.
5:44 recoil culatazo
8:05 problem cause he used quarter inch hose
8:22 we opted (optamos) for the jumbo nailer
Pressure will a lower at the nailer hence issue experienced. There’s a few factors for this. As already mentioned, a gauge on the nailer will show this. Also, by fitting a gauge you will begin to understand pressure losses etc. through hose and the likes. As always, a BIG 👍 from me!
Little john and the Creekside boys!
What brand pants and shorts do you wear.
Petr Lutsyk truewerk. Love them (not sponsored)
Looks like your driving into a treated 6x6? Is that why it's not sinking the nail down all of the way? Typically you drive them in to pine trusses
Cory Madison I think that on top of the fact that there was bounce and loss of power
Can you do trim with it?
We us the Senco framer pro it is the best it smaller and it sinks the nails
👍👍👍
Yeah Don’t Let It Get Wet Specially The Last Time The Gun Started Shooting Nails From Condensation Inside During The Cold 🥶 Weather In Overall Is Nice Gun Nailer.,. Did You Ever Find Out Why Or Reason...
Does Fasco have a competitor at this power level?
With the 6 1/4” nails: your boards were flexing when nail was shot. This “wastes” the energy of the nailer, leaving the nail proud. Thats my guess at least.
Ya they bounced on the saw ponies
👍👍
Ive never had tool lust like i do for this gun!!!
When I saw you connecting to your compressor i thought initially the tank was too small. The reason the nailer head is so large is that it needs a large capacity reservoir of air for each nail and a fast recovery, compared to your Hitachi. I had this problem in my workshop and cured it with a reserve air tank.
👍
Yeah I bought this gun it spends more time in the shop than it does on the job
What kind of work pants do you wear???
Truewerk. He mentioned them in another video but you can see the brand clearly at 5:18. truewerktools.com/
Hey. I'm here from Wollongong, Australia. What is a 20 penny ring shank. Can I have photos please.
Good call I should do a video
Yeah, unfortunately we downunder, do not have a an understanding of your sizes. We call it, 100 X 3.75 bullet head nail or flat head nail. Or gun nails are 50 X 2.89.
Trust me, your system makes much more sense.
I m going to return my new toy with out the pleasure of tested at the field/steel roof . because screws are discontinued ( just for metal roof )
What do you use for hearing protection??
4:54 gratuitous butt shot! 😂😂😂
Must have loaded 6.5 inch nails by mistake 🤣
I'm thinking that I want to purchase an R&R t-shirt.
Dirk Bremer www.rrbuildings.bigcartel.com
Thank you for the support
Too much bounce on those horses for the 6¼"
Why not use screws instead? Cost? Speed? Strength?
Screws dont have a great Shear strength. With post frame buildings you want as much shear strength as possible for when the winds blow through.
Isn't the shear strength depends on 2 factors: material and diameter? If the material is the same and diameter is the same? Basically the part when the shear forces occur is flat (shank) and the threaded part only inside the bottom part. Also, because of the additional clamping, the frictional force should be higher and overall strength also.
@@donalexey i mean i guess there is truth to that. I really dont know all tbe science behind it but generally nails have a stronger shear strength than screws. But screws have come a long way and there are bow screws that csn be stronger than nails. I like screws for clamping power but i will always go to a nail for shear power. But just my opinion.
While they do make structurally rated screws now.
The cost difference between a nail and screw rated with the same shear strength huge. The nail might be 10 cents, while the screw would be a couple dollars each.
Now times that by a couple thousand fasteners for a typical pole barn. Or 10,000 for a average house.
Edit to add that speed is also a factor, a those 4 inch nails take 1 second, a comparable rated screw would take 10-15 seconds depending on tool and lumber.
screws are hardened since they have to have threads and a socket head that doesn't get stripped. That makes them much more brittle and much weaker, and makes the building more like to fail catastrophically instead of flexing under load. There are structural screws that aren't brittle but they cost way more (probably 5 times?) and take much longer to drive, especially compared to an air nailer.
Great video... what’s the part number for the 4in and 6.5in nails with the blue coating?... I don’t seem to see them on the fasco site... or where do you source the nails? Cheers!
I'm sure he gets them at Menards. He's always saving big money at Menards
crank the pressure upto 135, run most of my airtools there cause thats what all my compressors came set to, im sure they dont get near that by the time the air travels through 50' of hose and a few fittings
Thinks it was an air supply problem. That hose is too small.
It didn't drive the 6" nails all the way because the 2x6's were flexing, not solid
What about the max 500
Ebay for $732.45 today, free shipping
how mucj????
Looks like you where bouncing the board to much aswell maybe
Twenty cents per nail. Makes me want to make a gun that shoots tensile wire cut off from a roll of fencing wire.
Thor's hammer :)
Great tools, great vid quality, but cameraman is NOT so great!
a 1/4 hose will not run that gun
Might want to rehearse demos. Hate it when things don't go as expected.
JohnMc sorry mate, don’t agree. You could always go watch commercial TV to see “expected “ ! Personally I respect the honesty 👍
I have a gas gun.
I have followed your videos for some time now and enjoy the building aspect of them but as I continue to watch them I find your are progressively endorsing products all the time which is all you seem to talk about nowadays, little disappointing
daniel hayes dude if you’ve followed me for any amount of time then you know it’s not about endorsement persay... it’s about educating what I feel is the best. The questions and DMs.... emails I get a week are staggering. I find this allows me a place t show people. Clearly I’m not being sponsored by one company. I try to use and show the best tool for every niche of the jobsite. Obviously I appreciate you following and I hope you can continue to enjoy the content. Thanks
daniel hayes WTF is wrong with Kyle endorsing, promoting or just showing if it's about something he knows it's actually useful and valuable? You fool, to back to your cave.